Los Angeles Times

GE chief weighs breakup

John Flannery raises the possibilit­y after disclosing $6.2-billion charge tied to an old insurance portfolio.

- By Rick Clough Clough writes for Bloomberg.

General Electric Co.’s new boss said he’s weighing potentiall­y dramatic changes, including a breakup of the company into separate businesses, after the iconic manufactur­er said it would take a major charge related to a legacy insurance operation.

“We are looking aggressive­ly at the best structure or structures for our portfolio to maximize the potential of our businesses,” Chief Executive John Flannery said Tuesday on a conference call with analysts. A review “could result in many, many different permutatio­ns, including separately traded assets really in any one of our units, if that’s what made sense.”

Flannery renewed the discussion of a potential breakup after disclosing a $6.2-billion charge related to an old portfolio of longterm-care insurance, another setback for a company already struggling with flagging demand in some key markets. The CEO, who took over for Jeffrey Immelt in August, is cutting costs and selling assets after GE posted last year’s biggest drop on the Dow Jones industrial average.

Although Flannery vowed last year to consider all options for GE, he emphasized a plan in November to focus on jet engines, power-generation equipment and healthcare machines. He also said GE would sell $20 billion in other assets, taking the spotlight off the possibilit­y of a more ambitious restructur­ing.

Flannery said Tuesday that he would continue to review the company’s strategic options and update investors in the spring.

The shares fell 2.9% to $18.21; earlier in the day, they were down as much as 4.1%, their biggest intraday decline in two months. GE had staged a modest rebound this year through Jan. 12, advancing 7.5%.

GE said it would take a $9.5-billion pretax charge related to GE Capital’s North American Life & Health portfolio. The after-tax effect of $6.2 billion will be $7.5 billion when adjusted to the rate after the recent U.S. tax overhaul. GE’s finance unit will pay $15 billion over seven years to fill a shortfall in reserves.

“Needless to say, at a time when we are moving forward as a company, I am deeply disappoint­ed at the magnitude of the charge,” Flannery said on the call. “It’s especially frustratin­g to have this type of developmen­t when we’ve been making progress on many of our key objectives.”

The Boston company hasn’t done any new business in the long-term-care market since 2006. Still, it was saddled with obligation­s on contracts written years ago. The liabilitie­s can swell when claims costs are higher than expected or when investment income fails to meet projection­s — a problem exacerbate­d by low interest rates.

GE said dividends from GE Capital to the parent company would remain suspended for the “foreseeabl­e future” after the payment was halted during the portfolio review.

Investors have been bracing since GE warned last year about potential problems in its long-term-care portfolio. At a shareholde­r meeting in November, Chief Financial Officer Jamie Miller said the company was likely to take a charge of more than $3 billion, which is the amount GE Capital would have paid in a secondhalf dividend.

Although an “outsized charge” was expected, $6.2 billion is “far in excess” of even the worst-case scenario expectatio­ns, Tom Gallagher, an analyst at Evercore, said in a note to clients.

Long-term-care insurance has become a headache for many of the companies active in that market in recent decades.

The policies, which emerged in their modern form in the 1980s, cover health-related costs not paid by Medicare or standard health insurance. But the products were undermined by faulty assumption­s such as how long people would live and how expensive their care would be. Low interest rates also hurt insurers’ ability to offset certain costs.

“Things really started to fall apart” for the long-termcare market in the early 2000s, said Joseph Belth, professor emeritus of insurance at Indiana University. “Companies found that they had to raise rates frequently and substantia­lly, and everybody was unhappy.”

Once the largest issuer of long-term-care policies, GE has been working for years to limit the volatility tied to financial industries such as insurance. It spun off Genworth Financial Inc., which has also faced problems with long-term care.

GE announced a plan in 2015 to sell the bulk of GE Capital’s operations. The company said Tuesday that there will be “ongoing actions” over the next two years to further shrink the finance business.

Many insurers have cut back or left the long-termcare market in recent years, including MetLife Inc. and Prudential Financial Inc. Genworth, which was spun out of GE in 2004, incurred billions of dollars in losses on the policies, and has agreed to be bought by China Oceanwide Holdings Group.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? GENERAL ELECTRIC is cutting costs and selling assets after posting last year’s biggest drop on the Dow Jones industrial average. Its shares fell 2.9% to $18.21 on Tuesday after being down as much as 4.1%.
Richard Drew Associated Press GENERAL ELECTRIC is cutting costs and selling assets after posting last year’s biggest drop on the Dow Jones industrial average. Its shares fell 2.9% to $18.21 on Tuesday after being down as much as 4.1%.

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